Friday, February 27, 2015

Author Lauren Sabel is at The Hiding Spot to chat a bit about her debut, Vivian Divine is Dead, which hit shelves in summer 2014! She also has much to say about the incorporation of Dia de los Muertos into the novel, how her writing process has changed since she wrote Vivian Divine, and even a bit about her upcoming novel, Out of My Mind, which I'm seriously excited about! Need Lauren's debut in your life? Don't forget to enter the giveaway for your very own copy!

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Your debut, Vivian
Divine is Dead, starts with a bang and very rarely slows it’s pace, but,
those times when things do quiet down and Vivian has time to think are often
telling and important. Did you struggle to find places to incorporate those
quiet moments, given the rapid pacing of the majority of the novel?

Yes, I do. Every writer struggles with something, and for
me, it’s quiet moments. This also means that I often struggle with character
depth, because those times of reflection are when we get to know the heart of
the character. I think its partly because my favorite plots are from TV shows
like 24, where the characters don’t go into great depth very often, but mostly
follow an exciting plotline that drives them past their physical and mental
comfort levels. So yes, I do struggle with it, and I’m working to overcome it
in my future books.

Upon receiving a death threat, Vivian, a teen celebrity and
actress, flees to Mexico until it’s safe to return to the States. Can you talk
a bit about your choice to weave Dia de los Muertos into the story?

I write mainly because I love seeing daydreams in my head. I
love to imagine a scene and play through it. It’s almost exactly like watching
a movie or having a lucid dream. It’s extremely enjoyable, and I get to craft
it and watch it from every angle, in full Technicolor. So part of the Dia de los
Muertos stuff is for the visuals.

However, the other, deeper part is that I’ve always
struggled with the death of the people I love. It’s terrified me my whole life,
and the only way I’ve found relief for my fears is through seeing death
differently.

When I went to Dia de los Muertos in Oaxaca City, Mexico, I
saw that it is possible to celebrate
death. To celebrate the life someone who has died, rather than only mourning
your loss and feeling guilty about what you didn’t or didn’t say or do, was
incredibly helpful to me. This attitude
towards death provided me with the internal freedom I needed to live happily,
despite knowing death is by always by our sides.

I wanted Vivian to have this revelation too, since it was so
meaningful for me, and hopefully some of my readers walked away with a little
less anxiety about death as well, or at least a recognition that there is a
different way to see death.

Tell me a little bit about your writing process: Do you
outline? Start at the beginning? The middle? The end?

I write differently now than I did when I wrote Vivian
Divine is Dead. Writing VDID was like
throwing scenes at a wall for years and hoping that some of them would stick. I
wrote scenes and put them in wherever they would fit, and then I wrote more scenes
and more scenes… I must’ve written 2000 pages of scenes. It took the help of my
wonderful editor to straighten it all out.

Now, with my new book OUT OF MY MIND, I started with a basic
outline. It has changed a great deal, and gotten much more complex, but I go
back and rewrite the outline every few months to make sure that I’m on the
right track.

What jobs did you have on your way to becoming a published
author? Is there a certain work experience that has shaped your writing or
provided inspiration?

I’ve been a college English instructor for almost ten years.
I’ve taught creative writing and screenplay writing, which were my favorite
subjects, and literature and composition. I have learned from my students every
semester, about how writing can change someone and which writing styles people
grab onto and don’t want to let go. I’ve also worked in a couple of film
festivals in New York and California, which is where I got the young Hollywood
star idea.

If you had to pick a favorite word, what would it be and
why?

Unique or cuddlebuggery. They just sound good on the tongue.

My blog is dedicated to my personal hiding spot, books. Who,
what, or where can be credited as your personal escape from reality?

My parents were always supportive of me hiding from reality.
They picked me out as a creative kid from the beginning and always encouraged
me to indulge in it. Of course, I’m not sure if they believed it would ever
make money for me, but they saw that I was most fulfilled while writing or
engrossed in a book. I give them a great deal of credit for giving me that gift
of time, praise, and support.

Later, my husband helped me confront reality, which meant
that I had to take all of these daydreams and stories and funnel them into
something that could be completed and handed to someone to read. His
disciplined approach and encouragement was invaluable, and so was his plot
advice.

What can readers look forward to next?

My next book comes out in 2016. It’s called OUT OF MY MIND,
and it’s a story about a teenage psychic who works undercover finding criminals
and solving crimes. Since she can’t share the truth about her life with the
people she loves, she’s always torn between who she really is and who people
think she is.

Originally from the Rocky
Mountains, Lauren Sabel has returned to the cool mountain air of
Boulder, Colorado after living in several wonderful cities that she will
always love and continue to visit year after year.

Lauren loves
her husband, her family, her friends, and stories that end happily.
(Unfortunately, hers never do.) She also loves digging into her mind and
revealing tiny gems she didn’t know were there.

Lauren learned
to mind dig while getting her MFA in Creative Writing from Naropa, a
Buddhist college in Boulder, Colorado. Before Naropa, Lauren studied
film in Rome, where she developed her love of crypts and other beautiful
creepy things. She also worked in the film industry in New York and San
Francisco, focusing mainly on film festivals, as she can never pass up a
good party. In San Francisco she worked for Chronicle Books, where she
was inducted into the fascinating world of book publishing.

For the past eight years, Lauren has been teaching college students the joys of creative writing, whether they like it or not.

In
2008, Lauren was published in Undiscovered Voices, an anthology of the
best new writers for children in the U.K., where she was living at the
time. Then life got very exciting very quickly. She signed with Jodi
Reamer Esq. at The Writer’s House Agency in New York, and they made
magic happen, and that magic is named Katherine Tegen. (aka: Katherine
Tegen Publishing, Harper Collins).

Lauren believes that being a teenager is
an act of courage, and is proud of anyone who manages to stick through
it, despite the pain. :)